state teams must maintain a four-year average of at least 930 or at least 940 for its most recent two-year average. (The latest four-year averages account for 2009-2010 through 2012-2013.)

The only sport that fell below the multi-year threshold was men’s basketball, which was ineligible for the 2012-2013 because of its low scores. That team again improved its averages with a perfect score of 1,000 in 2012-2013. It posted 980 in 2011-2012, putting the two-year average well above the acceptable level.

The mark represents further progress for men’s basketball, which overhauled its academic support system in response to the postseason ban. The team was hurt by a wave of transfers in 2009-2010 and 2010-2011, but the roster has been more stable recently. All 10 scholarship players eligible to return next season are expected to stay, despite the recent change in coaches from Buzz Peterson to Kevin Keatts.

All the Colonial Athletic Association men’s basketball teams — Elon joins July 1 to make 10 — are eligible for the postseason next year, and Appalachian State was the only North Carolina school to face a postseason ban in the sport. UNC-Charlotte is in line for a level one penalty, a reduction of four hours and one day of practice per week.

Nationwide, 57 teams across all sports are facing some sort of APR penalty with 36 banned from the 2014-2015 postseason.

“We’re very pleased with the academic progress of our student-athletes,” UNCW athletic director Jimmy Bass said in a release. “It’s a difficult balance because of the many time demands during the school year, but they continue to excel each year. I want to personally congratulate all of our student-athletes for their hard work and dedication in the classroom.”

Here are the mult-year averages for each of UNCW’s teams. (The men’s indoor track team is being dropped for next season, a move that will put the university at 18 varsity sports.)